All About Vestments: "The Opinionated Tailor" Speaks to St. Juliana Society

Kh. Krista WestMeetings of the St. Juliana Society for St. Vladimir's future clergy wives are often punctuated by laughter and animated conversation, and Monday evening's gathering at the residence of Fr. Chad and Mat. Thekla Hatfield was no exception. Lively guest Khouria Krista West, host of "The Opinionated Tailor" podcast,[2] offered a mini-seminar on both the care, and the spiritual symbolism, of clergy garments.

Krista has worked as an ecclesiastical tailor for over fifteen years and has created nearly 1000 sets of vestments through her Portland-based business. Her interest in the history and traditions of Eastern Orthodox liturgical vesture led her to Greece in 2004 to participate in a museum conservation course hosted by the Greek Ministry of Culture, and Lenten vestments at St. Vladimir'ssince then she has continued to research multiple aspects of this field, including natural dyestuffs and early Byzantine textile history.

"I'm here to tell you eleven things about vestments," announced Kh. Krista. "It was originally a nice, tidy list of ten, but then there was one I just had to add, so eleven it is!" Khouria noted that as a fellow clergy wife (her husband Fr. Alban is rector of St. George Antiochian Church in Portland, OR), she understood that there were some very practical issues related to vestments and as such, she offered this list:

Know what your husband's vestment needs are and be willing to share them with people in the parish.

Flowers aren't "girly" so get used to them!

Know the "hierarchy of vestments" and which are most important, so if the budget is limited, you can decide where it's appropriate to spend the most money.

Get to be friends with a very good dry cleaner.

Learn the right names of your husband's vestments.

Take vestments seriously; your children shouldn't play with them.

Monochromatic fabric isn't common in the Orthodox tradition—gold will always be shot through with red, for instance.

Vestments don't have a Jewish origin, they came from Roman civil dress and were subsequently standardized in the Byzantine era.

Don't let your husband throw his vestments in the back of the car and make sure he does grubby work in his spare grubby cassock.

Don't try to make vestments yourself! It is tricky business and is even difficult for professionals who've been highly trained.

Enjoy vestments and notice them.

Khouria Krista ended her talk with a quote from St. John of Damascus, who said that sight is the "queen of the senses." In Orthodoxy, she concluded, there is a richness that can be a source of joy and celebration throughout our lives, and in this, vestments play an important part.